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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, May 20, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

A federal judge has taken the highly unusual step to order prosecutors and their supervisors into court Thursday to explain why they redacted portions of grand jury transcripts in the “Broadview Six” case against Operation Midway Blitz protesters.

U.S. District April Perry’s order, which was posted to the public docket in the case Wednesday afternoon, called for any prosecutor “who participated in the decision to redact portions of the grand jury transcripts, whether on the trial team or at the supervisory level” to appear before her at 11 a.m. Thursday.

It was unclear who will be forced to appear in court, but Perry’s inclusion of “supervisors” in her order could include high-level people in the office, up to U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros, given the high profile of the case. […]

The proceedings will be conducted under seal “due to the anticipated discussion of grand jury materials and in an effort to avoid tainting the jury venire” in the upcoming criminal trial, which is slated to begin with jury selection Tuesday, according to Perry’s order.

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* Illinois Times

Legal proceedings between the owner of the vacant Wyndham Springfield City Centre Hotel and the hotel’s insurance company may be nearing resolution, but no details about what that resolution may look like have been made public.

The lawsuit between plaintiffs Full Service Hospitality LLC and Tower Capital Group — entities both associated with Wyndham owner Al Rajabi — and defendant Affiliated FM Insurance Co. has been reported as settled by the involved parties, according to an April 15 court filing with the Central District of Illinois.

The parties have until June 15 to file an official dismissal agreement, according to the filing. No details of the settlement were included with the filing.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Crain’s | Pritzker downplays rift with mayor over Bears but defends tax break proposal: “Do we want to spend $2.5 billion of taxpayer dollars on the Chicago Bears, or do we want to spend a lot less than that in order to keep the Chicago Bears in Illinois?” Pritzker said when asked about Johnson’s comments at an unrelated press conference this morning. “My response is: I think it’s about your values. It’s about what you really care about in life and who you’ve focused on. I’ve focused on the middle class, the working class and people most vulnerable throughout my career.”

* Illinois Network for Pretrial Justice | Scooping for Success: Ice Cream for a Cause at State Capitol: Ben & Jerry’s will join the Illinois Network for Pretrial Justice to serve ice cream and talk with legislators about essential investments in the Pretrial Success Grants program. Prior to the ice cream social, the Illinois Network for Pretrial Justice will join legislators for a press conference.

* Darren Bailey made an appearance at city council

*** Chicago ***

* WBEZ | Lake Michigan, Chicago River polluted with harmful microplastics: A test sampling of Lake Michigan, the Chicago River and other waterways across Illinois found tiny plastics present, posing potential threats to human health and damage to the environment, according to an advocacy group. In all, 31 test sites, including multiple samplings along Lake Michigan, showed broken-down plastics in the water. Known as microplastics, these small particles are being studied by government and academic researchers for possible links to illnesses, including cancer. Plastics don’t easily break down in the environment and also threaten fish and wildlife.

* Crain’s | Chicago-area home listings will stop showing up on Zillow: Escalating the battle over which homes for sale will get seen, the Chicago-area multiple-listing service cut off its data feed to Zillow. For people who are buying or selling a home this spring, today’s move by Lisle-based Midwest Real Estate Data means the visibility of listings will be greatly curtailed on one of the most popular places to shop for a home. For the real estate industry, it’s a complicated issue with many moving parts that may shape the future of the business.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Harvey relies on fire mutual aid from surrounding communities through fiscal crisis: Ever since Harvey laid off more than half its Fire Department due to an ongoing fiscal crisis, the city has made use of mutual aid supplied by surrounding municipalities, including Dolton and Hazel Crest, without being able to reciprocate. About 40% of Harvey’s city staff was furloughed in October following the city’s declaration of fiscal crisis, including about half of the Fire Department. Four more firefighters were laid off in a second round of layoffs in late November. Harvey Firemens Association Local 471’s secretary said at the time the Fire Department was down to three firefighters on most shifts, when they should have a minimum of seven.

* Aurora Beacon-News | After receiving more than 500 votes from the community, Aurora unveils names for baby falcons: After asking for community input, the city of Aurora has unveiled the names that will be given to the four baby falcons that recently hatched outside City Hall. Residents got the chance to submit nominations for the names through May 11, then the top 10 submissions went to a vote that was open through Monday. After nearly 400 nominations and over 500 votes, four names rose to the top: Aurora, Sky, Hope and Vern, according to a city news release.

* Daily Herald | District 203 wants to put the brakes on rideshares during school hours: With the rising popularity of teen rideshare services, Naperville Unit District 203 wants to put some guardrails in place for students. School board members on Monday got a first look at a proposed policy that would prohibit the use of rideshares during school hours for students under the age of 18. The proposed policy, believed to be a first in the area, would allow the use of rideshares during emergency situations if a parent or guardian has signed a waiver.

*** Downstate ***

* NPR Illinois | LLCC Truck Driver Training Program expands to Litchfield: Governor JB Pritzker joined the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) and Lincoln Land Community College (LLCC) Wednesday to announce plans for expanding the school’s Truck Driver Training Program. The State of Illinois will provide $2.6 million for design and implementation of infrastructure improvements, which will create a new training site in Litchfield. This investment will help meet the growing need for licensed commercial drivers, support local economic development, and provide stable career opportunities for Illinoisans.

* Illinois Times | “Electrons instead of ethanol”: Major solar development proposed for farmland near New Berlin: “It’s a big project,” said Sangamon County Board member Craig Hall, a Republican whose district includes New Berlin. “There are a lot of people who have concerns with it.” Hall said residents fear the project could depress nearby property values and discourage residential growth in an area where Springfield’s westward expansion already is reshaping rural communities. “You have something adjacent to someone else’s property and it affects their quality of life or the value of property,” Hall said. “Is that good zoning? I don’t think it is.”

* WGLT | Developer wants to add ‘passive’ homes to Bloomington-Normal’s housing mix: Rebecca Johnson, or DJ, is CEO and founder of COII, a company looking to design long-term, cost-effective homes focused on sustainability and wellness. “The concept is a modern, sustainable living development,” DJ said in an interview on WGLT’s Sound Ideas. “So that means that this concept is going to be all native landscaping, starting from the ground up, and then our homes are high performance, passive house-designed homes.”

* Illinois Times | Local cannabis businesses receive state funding: Four Sangamon and Logan County marijuana businesses received a total of nearly $2 million in direct forgivable loans last month from the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity as part of the Cannabis Social Equity Loan Program. Two craft grow businesses received $750,000 each in forgivable loans – Lincoln Labs and Rt. 66 Rec. Lincoln Labs, owned by Justin Condor, is located in Springfield, while Rt. 66 Rec, owned by Jeff Fulgenzi, Gary Alexander and Wilbur Day II, is located in Lincoln after a failed attempt to get zoning approval in Springfield.

*** National ***

* WaPo | These 5 charts show how ChatGPT has flooded our lives: The number of e-books published each week has nearly tripled since ChatGPT was released, according to a National Bureau of Economic Research study of English-language books offered for sale at Amazon. By the end of last year, more than half of all new books have AI-generated text, according to the study. This surge is unlike previous technological shifts, said Joel Waldfogel, an economist at the University of Minnesota who co-wrote the study. The internet also brought increases to the number of books published, giving great writers a platform to become best-selling authors.

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Caption contest!

Wednesday, May 20, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* On the left is Rep. Blaine Wilhour (which is likely the first and last time time you’ll see the Freedom Caucus member described that way), and on the right is Deputy House Majority Leader Bob Rita at last night’s annual House vs. Senate softball game…

  11 Comments      


Too far?

Wednesday, May 20, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Monday

Reporter: I’d like to get a little more information about the Mayor of Chicago. He has said repeatedly he has the only fleshed-out plan [for a Bears stadium]

Pritzker: He has no plan, there’s no plan [laughs]

Reporter: He’s also floated this idea now to have the city take over the ISFA. Have you seen that? Have you said anything to him about it?

Pritzker: No. And in fact, this is kind of typical. The mayor has shown up every spring at the end of session to pronounce what he would like to see happen.

* Matt McGill interviewed Mayor Johnson on WVON yesterday. I agree with McGill that the governor’s statements seemed pretty darned harsh. McGill prefaced a question to the mayor with this

McGill: I want you to have an opportunity to explain your position on the Bears because I just couldn’t believe the governor actually got in front of a microphone and said what he said yesterday. I have no problem with him feeling the way that he feels. But that conversation should be in private. And you know when I point to this is what’s wrong with the Democratic Party, I don’t want to have to use an example of the person who is supposed to be the leader of the Democratic Party in the state. See, this is the example of what I’m talking about. And just statements by the governor yesterday to take a shot at you yesterday was uncalled for, unprofessional, absolutely unprofessional.

He went on, but let’s stop there. Johnson, by the way, didn’t say he agreed with what McGill said above.

* Gov. Pritzker at an unrelated press conference this morning

Isabel: Do you think you may have gone a little overboard with your criticism of Mayor Johnson this week? WVON’s Matt McGill said that your statements about the mayor having no Bears plan were ‘absolutely unprofessional,’ and that should have been made in private, one party leader to another.

Pritzker: I was asked the question, I’m always honest with my answers. The truth is that there’s only one opportunity to keep the Chicago Bears in the state of Illinois, and that’s passing a bill that would help keep them in Arlington Heights, because the Bears have looked at Chicago, they decided that they don’t want to be and can’t be in Chicago, and so there’s really only one other option. And I want them to stay in the city. I think people who are opposed to the bill don’t want them to stay in the city, and so that was the nature of my, to the extent it was criticism, my criticism.

Isabel: Have you reached out to the mayor’s office, chat, maybe simmer down some of the back and forth that’s been going on?

Pritzker: No, this is 24 hours you’re talking about. We’re all busy, and you know the mayor and I are friends, even if we disagree on some things here and there. And so there’s no real need to reach out. The legislature is going to work on it this week, and I’m hopeful that the people who want to tank the bill are not successful.

Please pardon any transcription errors.

Discuss.

  22 Comments      


RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois

Wednesday, May 20, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Rising food costs are making it harder to maintain a healthy, balanced diet. But Green Top Grocery in Bloomington is working to change that narrative. This vibrant, community-owned co-op offers fresh produce, natural foods, and locally sourced products. With more than 2,600 local owners and a mission rooted in access and quality, Green Top Grocery supports healthier living and a stronger community.

Retail generates $7.3 billion in income and sales tax revenue each year in Illinois. These funds support public safety, infrastructure, education, and other important programs we all rely on every day. In fact, retail is the second largest revenue generator for the State of Illinois and the largest revenue generator for local governments.

Policies that support small businesses help communities thrive as retailers like Allison in Bloomington are better equipped to meet local needs. We Are Retail and IRMA are showcasing the retailers who make Illinois work. Please visit https://WeAreRetail.IRMA.org/.

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Call and response

Wednesday, May 20, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Politico last week

BOOTCAMP BLITZ: More than 100 Democratic candidates from across Illinois are set to gather Saturday at Illinois State University for a campaign bootcamp focused on messaging, field operations and fundraising as they prepare for the midterm elections.

Campaign crash course: The program is part of a broader national effort by the National Democratic Training Committee to prepare down-ballot campaigns in an increasingly fragmented media and political landscape. The organization works with the party to prepare Democrats to run for office.

Message machine: The Illinois session, organized in partnership with the Illinois Democratic County Chairs’ Association, is one of hundreds of in-person and virtual trainings the group says it conducts each year across all 50 states. Training Committee founder Kelly Dietrich said a key lesson this year is about ramping up communication skills — “not telling candidates what to say, but how to say it.”

From the heart: “Traditionally, Democrats bring facts and figures, white papers to a gunfight,” he said in an interview. “We need to be using emotions… connect with voters as a human.”

Jettison the jargon: That approach, Dietrich said, means shifting away from technical statistics and toward everyday experiences. Instead of citing inflation rising 3.8 percent, for example, candidates should talk about “when you take your kids to the grocery store, every time that bill is higher. And the cost of eggs is not coming down.”

I’m not sure many candidates are citing precise inflation data, but the Democrats do have a very real jargon problem. Perhaps more importantly, though, the specific advice is wrong because egg prices are way down. Beef prices have continued to rise, however.

Anyway, that was kind of a tangent.

* ILGOP yesterday…

While President Trump and our Republican majorities in Congress are busy fixing the mess the Democrats left behind, Illinois Democrats are gathering at Illinois State University for a different reason:

They are learning how to hide the truth.

In a “campaign bootcamp” held last weekend, over 100 Democrat candidates were told to stop using “facts and figures” and “white papers.” Why? Because the facts don’t support their radical agenda.

Instead, their trainers told them to use “emotions” to “connect with voters.”

    “Traditionally, Democrats bring facts and figures, white papers to a gunfight,” he said in an interview. “We need to be using emotions… connect with voters as a human.”

Translation: They know they can’t defend their record on high taxes, rising crime, and the cost of living in Illinois. So, they are being coached to use emotional scripts to distract you from the reality of their failed policies.

While Republicans in DC are delivering results—slashing regulations and securing our borders—Illinois Democrats are focused on “rebranding” their failures.

We can’t let them get away with this “Bootcamp of Deception.”

They have the “Message Machine” and the “Emotional Scripts.” We have the truth. But getting that truth to voters across Illinois costs money.

DONATE TODAY TO HELP US EXPOSE THE DEMOCRAT LIES

Don’t let them mask the damage they’ve done to our state. Help us fight back against the Democrat spin machine today.

To Victory,

The ILGOP Team

Discuss.

  19 Comments      


It’s Time To Bring Safer Rides To Illinois

Wednesday, May 20, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Waymo is ready to bring safe, reliable, autonomous rides to Illinois – but we need your help! Waymo is already mapping Chicago’s unique streets and traffic patterns to lay the groundwork for operations.

Never tired or distracted, Waymo provides hundreds of thousands of fully autonomous rides every week across ten major U.S. cities, from Los Angeles to Atlanta — from multi-lane expressways to dense city streets, including the demands of winter weather. The data shows Waymo’s autonomous vehicles are involved in thirteen times fewer injury-causing collisions compared to humans (as of 3/20/26, see waymo.com/safety). Let’s bring safer rides to Illinois.

Ready to ride? Help bring Waymo to Illinois.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Softball photos

Wednesday, May 20, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Illinois Positioned To Become A National Leader On AI Safety

Wednesday, May 20, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

California and New York have already moved forward with frontier AI safety and transparency laws. Illinois legislators are building on these “blue-state” models by establishing some of the strongest protections in the country to safeguard residents from the risks posed by the most powerful AI systems.

As artificial intelligence continues to evolve, the need for clear standards around safety, transparency, incident reporting, and accountability becomes increasingly important. While a comprehensive federal framework for frontier AI oversight would be preferable, states have a critical role to play. Illinois, alongside California and New York, is helping shape an emerging national model for responsible AI governance.

When major states align on policy, companies often adopt those standards nationwide. Illinois residents deserve confidence that advanced AI technologies are being developed responsibly. Illinois legislators are helping ensure the companies developing these systems operate with transparency, accountability, and meaningful oversight. We appreciate the Senate’s partnership on these issues during the final weeks of session.

Paid for by Build American AI

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The back-side protection continues

Wednesday, May 20, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This story from last month kinda got lost in the shuffle of a busy week

[DuPage County State’s Attorney Bob Berlin] renewed his call for [SAFE-T Act] reforms recently, citing the recent death of a Villa Park woman by strangulation.

The recent incident Berlin highlighted involved Estefania Abril-Hernandez, who was found dead in her Villa Park home by DuPage County Sheriff’s deputies at 3:49 a.m. Thursday, March 19, after having been reported missing the prior evening by her family.

Abril-Hernandez is believed to have died by strangulation; she was found with a vacuum power cord wrapped tightly around her neck nine times.

Abril-Hernandez’s estranged husband, Brian Hernandez, of Oak Forest, is suspected of the murder. Police found him in possession of Abril-Hernandez’s vehicle and cell phone prior to locating Abril-Hernandez.

While discussing the incident at a DuPage County Board meeting Tuesday, April 14, Berlin outlined Hernandez’s history of violent behavior, which included alleged interference in past domestic violence incidents with Abril-Hernandez.

One particular incident involved Hernandez allegedly hanging up on 911 operators as Abril-Hernandez initially called the emergency number.

Speaking specifically to the 911 hang-up, Berlin indicated Hernandez was released on a recognizance bond, since interfering with a domestic violence report is not a detainable offense under the current provisions within the Illinois Pretrial Fairness Act.

But a domestic battery charge is detainable, and for whatever reason he wasn’t charged with committing that crime, even though at some point Ms. Abril-Hernandez obtained an order of protection. So it must’ve been serious. Instead Hernandez was charged apparently more than once with the misdemeanor crime of interfering with a domestic violence report. Berlin has yet to explain why.

* I was reminded of the story when this press release from the Illinois Network for Pretrial Justice arrived in my in-box

• In March of this year, Estefania Abril-Hernandez’s estranged husband murdered her. [DuPage County] State’s Attorney Bob Berlin seized on this tragedy to renew his calls for changes to increase the detention eligibility net, complaining that there are “loopholes in the law.” Abril-Hernandez’s husband had been accused of hanging up the phone as she called 911 to report domestic violence, and prosecutors charged him with interfering with a domestic violence report. That misdemeanor is not a detainable offense under the Pretrial Fairness Act (nor was it under the money bond system), and her husband was released.

• It is important to note two things:

    o Under the old money bond system, he would not have been eligible for pretrial detention and would have been, at most, ordered to pay a money bond.
    o The law the husband was charged with violating requires that he first commit an act of domestic violence, chargeable as the detainable offense of domestic battery, yet the prosecutor did not file that charge.

• It is not clear why Berlin’s office opted for this lesser—and what he deemed a “loophole”—charge, which they knew was not detainable, or if there was anything that could have predicted that this man would commit this horrific act. Nor do we know whether the office offered Ms. Arbril-Hernandez any resources before this tragedy occurred. Rather than reflect on whether his office, or any other entity, could have done something differently, Mr. Berlin once again railed against provisions of the Pretrial Fairness Act.

• Berlin’s own statements show how opportunistic he is being. “Since its implementation into law two-and-a-half years ago,” a local news station reported, “DuPage County State’s Attorney Bob Berlin said he has been calling for amendments to the Illinois Pretrial Fairness Act” It should be no surprise, then, that he used this tragedy as a platform to call, yet again, for changes.

Blaming the Pretrial Fairness Act or a judge’s decision for atypical events is disingenuous and misguided. Instead, it would be more productive to conduct an analysis after such an event occurs to determine whether there are places where interventions or other actions might have made a difference: from mental health treatment to relocation support for a victim to following protocols when warrants are issued. Opponents of the Pretrial Fairness Act do not appear to be interested in conducting that analysis, but instead, they jump to blame the law, which is completely unproductive.

  32 Comments      


340B Bill Helps Ensure Access To Care For Vulnerable Illinoisans – Pass HB 2371 SA 2

Wednesday, May 20, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Protecting the federal 340B Drug Pricing Program in Illinois means protecting access to care. Like more than 20 other states, Illinois safety net healthcare providers and their patients are urging legislators to pass legislation that would end arbitrary drugmaker restrictions on 340B discounts.

These discounts help ensure low-income patients have access to lifesaving drugs and other critical healthcare services. Here are a few examples of how 340B helps hospitals break down barriers to care for vulnerable Illinoisans:

    • Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago offers new high-priced gene therapies to low-income families.
    • Sinai Chicago invests in specialty clinics for diabetes, cancer and infectious disease, as well as medication management services.
    • Hammond-Henry Hospital offers outpatient pediatric therapy, including physical, occupational and speech therapy, services that were limited in their community before 340B.
    • Carle Health established its Transitional Care Clinic to provide intensive intervention services to medically complex patients immediately following hospitalization.
    • UChicago Medicine expanded its adult emergency department and built a new adult trauma center and state-of-the-art Center for Care and Discovery focused on cancer, advanced surgery, and more.

Pass House Bill 2371 SA 2 to preserve access to care for the patients whose health depends on it. Your constituents are counting on you. Learn more.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, May 20, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: ‘I’ve spoken to the governor’: NFL commissioner Roger Goodell offers Bears stadium update. WGN

    - As political gridlock over the Chicago Bears stadium saga continues, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell took to the microphone in Orlando on Tuesday to shed light on the latest proceedings between the Bears and the NFL’s stadium committee.
    - “There was a report on all of the stadium projects. We’re in the midst of what we would call a very significant stadium construction period and/or significant renovations,” Goodell said. “There was a specific update on the Bears with respect to the two sites that they are evaluating that are viable in the Bears’ mind and others, in ours. One in Illinois and one in Indiana.
    - “I’ve spoken to the governor recently. I think there’s a focus on trying to get something done there, and then they’ll have two viable sites that the Bears can make their decision from,” Goodell said.

* Related stories…

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* At 10 am, Gov. JB Pritzker will speak during a Lincoln Land Community College truck driving announcement. At 12:30 pm, he’ll deliver remarks for the IRMA Retail Challenge Award Ceremony at the Executive Mansion in Springfield. Click here to watch.

* BlueRoomStream.com’s coverage of today’s press conferences and committee hearings can be found here.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Daily Southtown | Thornton Fractional officials ‘scrambling, trying to figure it out’ amid federal gender ideology probe: Williams said at that point, leaders of some of the other 36 Illinois school districts named in the investigation began texting each other, hoping to gain more insight into why the U.S. Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division was targeting them. The only link they could find was having received a grant helping to fund weapons detection systems and other school security measures, Williams said.

* Capitol City Now | Session nears home stretch: “I have no doubt that we’re going to get the Springfield Downtown Redevelopment Plan across the finish line,” said State Sen. Doris Turner (pictured, left) (D-Springfield). “It’s going to be phenomenal for not only the city of Springfield but also for the downstate region. McClure says the idea of a publicly subsidized hotel as part of that plan leaves him short in two ways: hotels and motels would collect tax revenue to support a hotel which would then compete against them; and McClure believes resolving the problem of the shuttered Wyndham hotel should be the top priority. “The Wyndham needs to be torn down,” said McClure.

*** Statewide ***

* WBEZ | More Latinos are homeless in Illinois, spurred by Texas busing migrants to Chicago, report finds: Homelessness rates increased among Latinos in Illinois in recent years, exacerbated by the influx of migrants bused to Chicago by the governor of Texas, according to a new report. But experts are worried that potentially tens of thousands more people without permanent housing are flying under the radar. Titled “Latine Homelessness in Illinois: Structural Drivers of Inequality,” the report found that on any given night in the past decade, more than 1,000 Latinos were staying in Illinois homeless shelters, with another 200 living on the streets. Another 30,000 Latinos were “doubled-up,” meaning they didn’t have stable housing and were temporarily staying with family or friends.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Daily Herald | Backpacker, accountant, ‘civil right’ member: New GOP chair steps up to lead fractious team: But, “I do believe in the average common sense of the Illinois voter,” Grogan said. “At some point, one by one, discussion by discussion, door knock by door knock, Facebook post by Facebook post … they do see that Republicans’ answers to some of these everyday life problems are better. “We need to speak a little bit more loudly and a little bit clearly, and I think that’s how you overcome all the structural disadvantages that the Democrats have dealt us.” […] His takeaway is “it’s either the conservative, moderate coalition that runs the state or the liberal, moderate coalition that runs the state. If (Republicans) have any interest in advancing our agenda, we have to embrace both conservatives and moderates. We cannot purge our way to 51%.”

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Former high-ranking Chicago cop sues city, claims he was wrongfully placed on ‘don’t hire’ list: The lawsuit highlights a memo sent to Snelling on April 26, 2025, by Joy Brown, another defendant in the case who serves as director of human resources for the city’s Office of Public Safety Administration. The memo recommended that Barz be added to the do-not-hire list, focusing on two disciplinary investigations that purportedly led to recommendations for 15-day suspensions. However, Barz never faced a sustained disciplinary complaint over his career, including in those two cases, the suit holds. And those suspensions weren’t imposed.

* NBC Chicago | How would a sale of Chicago’s parking meters affect drivers?: “There’s not a way to really change this thing unless it’s to essentially add more meters or increase prices,” said Ald. Scott Waguespack, who was a “no” vote on the original deal in ‘08. One possible impact Waguespack does see from the sale is parking rates and app fees could increase.

* Fox Chicago | Video shows suburban man fatally shot by ISP during struggle in Chicago: Illinois State Police released video Friday from a fatal officer-involved shooting on Chicago’s South Side last month in which officers shot and killed a suburban man during a struggle after responding to a reported domestic battery incident. […] According to the footage provided by ISP, the mother of the woman who called police for help said the deadly confrontation occurred after Carpenter and her daughter had been arguing. “He (the officer) had to shoot,” the mother is heard saying in the video. “He pulled a gun on the police.”

* ABC Chicago | Chicago-area residents getting paid to ‘like’ social media posts lose thousands: ‘Put me in a hole’: Erica says she later deposited another $15,000 into the crypto platform over the course of a year. She and others say deposits helped them move up in “tiers” to hopefully make more money by “liking” more posts. But last August, consumers say, the company shut down, and they were unable to cash out. Erica estimates her losses at nearly $37,000. Willie says he lost $3,000 in crypto deposits.

* Lake County News-Sun | Delays could open door to carp invasion of the Big Lake: Illinois began stocking millions of salmon and trout species in the late 1960s in an attempt to cut down on alewives, a nuisance bait fish that salmon have taken a liking to. A bonus to adding predators to the lake to eat invasive alewives was the growth of the sport-fishing industry on Lake Michigan from Chicago north to Winthrop Harbor and into Wisconsin. All that could be lost, like a coho throwing a lure in a spectacular jump, as federal bureaucrats have dallied over implementing a defensive line to keep invasive Asian carp — mainly silver carp — from entering Lake Michigan. Last month, the Army Corps of Engineers finally awarded the second contract.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* NBC Chicago | Arlington Heights mayor discusses Bears stadium as legislative session wanes: Arlington Heights Mayor Jim Tinaglia echoed reporting from the Chicago Tribune on Tuesday while discussing that site located in Hammond. He raised questions about the proximity of the proposed site to the BP refinery along the lakefront, the company’s largest in the world, and to a Superfund clean-up site. “It’s a challenge. It’s a real challenge,” he said. “People know I’m an architect and I work for people all the time. Does it have proper management for environmental protection and stormwater management? If it doesn’t, it’s dollars to (fix it).”

* Daily Herald | Arlington Heights mayor promises public input on Bears project — after vote in Springfield: “I think we can all agree this (Bears project) is going to be a decision that changes Arlington Heights one way or another more than any other decision in our history, and I don’t feel like the residents have had a voice,” resident David Korney said at a village board meeting Monday night. Village officials have said public meetings about the NFL franchise’s proposed redevelopment of the 326-acre former Arlington Park racetrack are coming, but Korney argued now is the time to get those forums scheduled. He also called for formal polling of village residents and a referendum on the November ballot.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora investigating cyber attack that led to fraudulent payments from city accounts: The city discovered the fraudulent activity on April 30, the day after it happened, according to Aurora Mayor John Laesch. He called it a “very sophisticated cyber attack,” but said the city currently believes its internal systems were not compromised. Laesch declined to give a dollar amount, or even a ballpark estimate, for how much went missing from city accounts. The Aurora Police Department and other partners are trying to figure out the actual amount, a city spokesperson said. It is an active investigation, the spokesperson said, and do not want to compromise its integrity.

* Lake County News-Sun | Waukegan expecting $600K budget surplus next fiscal year: Planning to spend $11 million less than a year ago, the city is projecting expenses of $281.7 million with anticipated revenue from all sources, including property taxes of $282.3 million, yielding a $600,000 surplus. “We set the tone early, toeing the line with no more than a 2% increase from last year to this year,” Mayor Sam Cunningham said. “We have a good idea of the projects we want to complete. Compared to years past, we believe this helped us.”

* ABC Chicago | Marijuana DUI case dropped over ‘erroneous evidence’ from UIC drug testing lab: The I-Team reveals the latest aftershock from flawed marijuana DUI test results, learning prosecutors in Lake County, Illinois, are dismissing charges against a man accused of DUI and causing a fatal crash. Calling it “scientifically erroneous evidence,” the state’s attorney in Lake County told the I-Team he had to drop charges against a driver involved in a 2023 crash that killed a Skokie man. The case was hinged on faulty lab results from the same lab the I-Team exposed more than a year ago.

* Daily Herald | Mayoral tiebreaker propels Mount Prospect pedestrian bridge forward: The 200-foot-long bridge spanning Northwest Highway and the Union Pacific Railroad tracks is expected to begin construction in July and finish in 2027. Right until the end, the village board was split on the need for bridge, with Mount Prospect Mayor Paul Hoefert breaking a 3-3 deadlock. Hoefert said he was enthusiastic about the bridge’s potential for fostering connectivity within the village.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Still seeking ways to solve looming shortfall, Kane County Board OKs some 2027 budget measures: Kane County has been facing a looming budget shortfall in its general fund in recent years, which its board has been solving since 2023 by dipping into the county’s cash reserves. But, county staff has cautioned that doing so won’t be an option forever, and that the county must make significant cuts or find new revenue before 2027 to avoid dipping into its required 90-day reserves.

*** Downstate ***

* KSDK | Residents of southern Illinois city demand action over repeated flooding in neighborhood: People living in the Holiday Terrace neighborhood in Centralia say their street floods anytime the area gets more than a light sprinkle. “You can just watch the water start rising,” Robert Smith said. “Then you’ve got to worry about the white caps.” […] When a reporter stopped by Centralia City Hall to see whether city leaders were aware of the ongoing flooding issue. The reporter was redirected to the public works department, where no one answered the door. Multiple calls and emails to the Centralia Public Works Department have also gone unanswered.

* WAND | Springfield doubles parking fines for overstaying downtown spots: Parking will remain free, but if your car is caught in a short-term spot longer than allowed, you’ll be fined. Alderman hope increasing the fee from $10 to $20 will encourage downtown employees to park in garages and other locations. Fees will also increase for parking in a “No parking zone” on private property and other so-called improper parking.

* WCIA | Macon Co. police department aims to increase the number of women with badges: “Women bring something unique to the job. Often times, women are more compassionate, they’re more caring. Sometimes they’re slower to jump in a dynamic situation, which sometimes those situations require a slower, more patient approach and sometimes it takes a woman to back that situation off and go at it with a different perspective,” Flannery said. She added that Decatur Police has 15 women employed out of a department of 150. Flannery also said that it’s a number she has only seen grow in her 20 years at the department.

*** National ***

* Nomination Notes | Eight Democrats vote to confirm a lifetime judge who wouldn’t say Biden won in 2020: Clarke is the first judicial nominee in more than three months to receive bipartisan support on the Senate floor, earning the affirmative votes of Democratic Senators Dick Durbin, John Fetterman, Ruben Gallego, Maggie Hassan, Martin Heinrich, Jack Reed, Jeanne Shaheen, and Sheldon Whitehouse. Senator Chris Coons, who recently voted to advance Clarke’s nomination out of the Senate Judiciary Committee, voted against her confirmation today. Nine Senate Republicans missed the confirmation vote, meaning Senate Democrats — had they all voted ‘no’ — could have blocked confirmation and forced a later vote.

* NYT | Meta Begins Laying Off 8,000 Employees Amid A.I. Transformation: In April, they were told that 8,000 of them, or 10 percent of the work force, would be laid off on May 20 as Meta remade itself for the artificial intelligence era. On Monday, they learned that another 7,000 employees would be reassigned to new A.I. initiatives. The ax started to fall in Singapore, where at 4 a.m. local time on Wednesday emails went out to workers who were being laid off. Employees in Britain, the United States and elsewhere will be notified early Wednesday morning in their respective time zones.

* Reuters | US regulator sues to block Minnesota’s first-in-nation ban on prediction markets: The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission on Tuesday filed a lawsuit ‌seeking to block Minnesota from enforcing a newly enacted law that made the state the first nationally to outright ban prediction markets like those run by Kalshi and Polymarket. […] In Tuesday’s lawsuit, the CFTC argued that Minnesota’s novel law violated the U.S. Constitution by criminalizing at the state level the operation of derivatives markets governed by federal law.

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